4.2 Article

Effect of Chelating Agents on the Stability of Nano-TiO2 Sol Particles for Sol-Gel Coating

Journal

JOURNAL OF NANOSCIENCE AND NANOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 15, Issue 11, Pages 8429-8433

Publisher

AMER SCIENTIFIC PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1166/jnn.2015.11462

Keywords

TiO2; Sol-Gel; Chelating Agent; Catalyst; Coating

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Agglomeration of sol particles in a titanium alkoxide (tetrabutyl orthotitanate (TBOT), >97%) solution during the hydrolysis and condensation steps makes the sol solution difficult to use for synthesizing homogeneous sol gel coating. Here, we have investigated the effect of stabilizing agents (acetic acid and ethyl acetoacetate (EAcAc)) on the agglomeration of Ti alkoxide particles during hydrolysis and condensation in order to determine the optimized conditions for controlling the precipitation of TiO2 particles. The study was conducted at R-AC ([acetic acid]/[TBOT]) = 0.1-5 and R-EAcAc([EAcAc]/[TBOT]) = 0.05-0.65. We also studied the effects of a basic catalyst ethanolamine (ETA), water, and HCl on sol stability. The chelating ligands in the precursor sol were analyzed with FT-IR. The coating properties were examined by focused ion beam. The stabilizing agents (acetic acid and EAcAc) significantly influenced the agglomeration and precipitation of TBOT precursor particles during hydrolysis. As R-AC and R-EAcAc increased, the agglomeration remarkably decreased. The stability of the sol with acetic acid and EAcAc arises from the coordination of the chelating ligand to TBOT that hinders hydrolysis and condensation. A uniform fine coating (thickness: 30 nm) on stainless steel was obtained by using an optimized sol with R-AC = 0.5 and R-EAcAc = 0.65.

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